Effects on Nationalism in America

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H.G. Wells once said, “Our true nationality is mankind.” The effects on nationalism in America are what makes the United States a stronger nation. In the years that brought us to were we are today have proven that we are strong as a whole. Especially in the 1800s, we played a huge deal in developing new ways and inventions better than Galileo himself. The Second Great Awakening, the Industrial Revolution, and the Educational Reform, are all proof that effected nationalism in America.
The Second Great Awakening lasted some what of fifty years, from around the 1790s to the 1840s. It also spanned across the whole United States. The revitalization that the Awakening represented manifested itself in many different ways than other communities and church establishments. The Awakening was definitely a Protestant phenomenon. Along with the new Awakening, revivals occurred on a scale with a amount unseen previously in the United States. With the upcoming of revivalism from the Awakening, the evolution of a certain revivalist method in aiming towards people in masses, the age of evangelicalism arrived, with the Protestants leading the charge.
The Second Great Awakening impacted the social scholarly literature. The traditional school of thought has tended to portray the time period as one of widespread secularization and the concomitant efforts of church elites to bring wandering Christians back into the ecclesiastical fold. The Second Great Awakening appears as a process of renewal, as churches tried to co-opt Evangelical activism by dressing in new clothes, rather than the old traditional. By concentrating on the impulses of the Presbyterian and Congregationalist establishments, but neglecting the Second Great Awakening outside New En...

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...ained, and that children should be required to attend school.
By 1850, many states in the North and including the West used Mann’s ideas of public schools. But American still did not offer education to all. Most high-schools and even colleges did not let females be included into their schools. African Americans were made to go to different schools that received less pay by the state. Oberlin College became the first college to let women in, in addition to men. In 1837, Mary Lyon founded Mount Holyoke, the first ever nation’s first permanent women’s college.
Nationalism was expressed throughout the 1800s. These people came together through different ideas. Through these different ideas America came to be known as a stronger nation. The Second Great Awakening, the Industrial Revolution, and the Educational Reform, are all proof that effected nationalism in America.

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